RonPurewal Wrote:mcmebk Wrote:I am still confused why moon's is wrong.
Do we say:
I have the same book as you or
I have the same book as your or
I have the same book as yours?
Don't overcomplicate the issue. Just look for simple parallelism whenever possible.
"Yours" should go with "my book" or "mine". Not with "me".
"You" goes with "I".
So...
I have the same book as you (do) --> works.
I have the same book as yours --> nah
My book is the same as you --> nope
My book is the same as yours --> works.
Mr. Purewal before posting this question to you I pondered two days to understand this option -
D. Four hundred times larger than the Moon and 400 times farther away from Earth, the Sun has the same apparent size in the sky as the Moon's.
and relate it to the example that you have cited, but I am still confused.
I think moon's correctly implies the size of the moon or perhaps the reason for its refusal is that moon's can refer to so many other things such as
moon's size
moon's color
moon's water
moon's satellite
moon's density
moon's radius
I thinks this raise an ambiguity and I feel that this is the reason why D is not good, Right?
One more question whats is the difference between
moon's &
moons'
I have one more understanding why Option B is a better choice then option D.
B. The Sun, which is 400 times larger than the Moon, is also 400 times farther away from Earth, so the Sun and the Moon have the same apparent size in the sky.
D. Four hundred times larger than the Moon and 400 times farther away from Earth, the Sun has the same apparent size in the sky as the Moon's.
Option B uses the conjunction "
so" that is able to connect the causal flow of the sentence. I mean Since Sun has X(
400 times larger than the Moon) and Y(
400 times farther away from Earth) comparable properties so sun and moon has the same apparent size. Is my Understanding correct?
RonPurewal Wrote:When "so" connects two ideas"”i.e., idea #2 is a consequence of idea #1"”you need to have complete sentences before AND after "so".
(complete sentence) + so + (other complete sentence)
E.g.,
I got stuck behind an accident, so I was late to work.
"I got stuck behind an accident" is a complete sentence, as is "I was late to work".
In choice E, the stuff before "so" is not a complete sentence. It's just a giant modifier. (It has neither a subject nor a verb!)
Wow Ron Sir, This Was the Classic reason to eliminate Option E.
RonPurewal Wrote:#1 and #3 are wrong.
#2 is correct.
Also, "have" is unnecessary; "I have the same pen as you" is correct, too.
The whole point of "the same NOUN as ___" is that ___ is not the same NOUN.
If a comparison like this can be made, then the NOUN must exist in two different sets of circumstances. Thus, "___" will represent the other set of circumstances surrounding the NOUN. (In this example, the two sets of circumstances are your and my ownership of the pen in question.)
"The same pen as your pen" would be redundant by nature. Not good.
Ron Sir, I have difficulty understanding this point. Can you elucidate this with more examples. Thanks!